Ifrs aag 2022 12 31

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Ifrs aag 2022 12 31

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Chuẩn mực kế toán quốc tế IFRS cập nhật 2022..........................................................................................................................................................................................

IFRS AT A GLANCE As at 31 December 2022 IFRS at a Glance (IAAG) has been compiled to assist in gaining a high level overview of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), including International Accounting Standards and Interpretations IAAG includes all IFRSs in issue as at 31 December 2022 If a Standard or Interpretation has been revised with a future effective date, the revised requirement has also been included and is identified by an (R) suffix For a summary of standards and amendments that have been issued as at 31 December 2022, but are not yet effective, please refer to BDO’s year-end IFRS Update IFR Bulletin For IFRS FAQs relating to each IFRS At a Glance, click on the ‘FAQ’ button near the top right of each publication, which links to BDO’s IFRS FAQ publication series Table of contents IFRS FIRST-TIME ADOPTION OF IFRSs IFRS SHARE-BASED PAYMENT IFRS BUSINESS COMBINATIONS IFRS INSURANCE CONTRACTS IFRS NON-CURRENT ASSETS HELD FOR SALE AND DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS IFRS EXPLORATION FOR AND EVALUATION OF MINERAL RESOURCES IFRS FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS: DISCLOSURES IFRS OPERATING SEGMENTS IFRS FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS IFRS 10 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS IFRS 11 JOINT ARRANGEMENTS IFRS 12 DISCLOSURE OF INTERESTS IN OTHER ENTITIES IFRS 13 FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENT IFRS 14 REGULATORY DEFERRAL ACCOUNTS IFRS 15 REVENUE FROM CONTRACTS WITH CUSTOMERS IFRS 16 LEASES IFRS 17 INSURANCE CONTRACTS IAS PRESENTATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS IAS INVENTORIES IAS STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS IAS ACCOUNTING POLICIES, CHANGES IN ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES AND ERRORS IAS 10 EVENTS AFTER THE REPORTING PERIOD IAS 12 INCOME TAXES IAS 16 PROPERTY PLANT AND EQUIPMENT IAS 19 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS IAS 20 GOVERNMENT GRANTS IAS 21 THE EFFECTS OF CHANGES IN FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES IAS 23 BORROWING COSTS IAS 24 RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES IAS 26 ACCOUNTING AND REPORTING BY RETIREMENT BENEFIT PLANS IAS 27 SEPARATE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS IAS 28 INVESTMENTS IN ASSOCIATES AND JOINT VENTURES IAS 29 FINANCIAL REPORTING IN HYPERINFLATIONARY ECONOMIES IAS 32 FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS: PRESENTATION IAS 33 EARNINGS PER SHARE IAS 34 INTERIM FINANCIAL REPORTING IAS 36 IMPAIRMENT OF ASSETS IAS 37 PROVISIONS, CONTINGENT LIABILITIES AND CONTINGENT ASSETS 10 11 12 13 15 16 26 30 34 37 41 43 51 56 62 64 65 66 67 68 69 71 73 74 75 76 78 79 81 84 87 88 89 91 93 IAS 38 INTANGIBLE ASSETS IAS 39 FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS: RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT IAS 40 INVESTMENT PROPERTY IAS 41 AGRICULTURE IFRIC CHANGES IN EXISTING DECOMMISSIONING, RESTORATION AND SIMILAR LIABILITIES IFRIC MEMBERS’ SHARES IN CO-OPERATIVE ENTITIES AND SIMILAR INSTRUMENTS IFRIC RIGHTS TO INTERESTS ARISING FROM DECOMMISSIONING, RESTORATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL REHABILITATION FUNDS IFRIC LIABILITIES ARISING FROM PARTICIPATING IN A SPECIFIC MARKET: WASTE ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT IFRIC APPLYING THE RESTATEMENT APPROACH UNDER IAS 29 FINANCIAL REPORTING IN HYPERINFLATIONARY ECONOMIES IFRIC REASSESSMENT OF EMBEDDED DERIVATIVES IFRIC 10 INTERIM FINANCIAL REPORTING AND IMPAIRMENT IFRIC 12 SERVICE CONCESSION ARRANGEMENTS IFRIC 14 IAS 19: THE LIMIT ON A DEFINED BENEFIT ASSET, MINIMUM FUNDING REQUIREMENTS AND THEIR INTERACTION IFRIC 16 HEDGES OF A NET INVESTMENT IN A FOREIGN OPERATION IFRIC 17 DISTRIBUTION OF NON-CASH ASSETS TO OWNERS IFRIC 19 EXTINGUISHING FINANCIAL LIABILITIES WITH EQUITY INSTRUMENTS IFRIC 20 STRIPPING COSTS IN THE PRODUCTION PHASE OF A SURFACE MINE IFRIC 21 LEVIES IFRIC 22 FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS AND ADVANCE CONSIDERATION IFRIC 23 UNCERTAINTY OVER INCOME TAX TREATMENTS SIC-7 INTRODUCTION OF THE EURO SIC-10 GOVERNMENT ASSISTANCE: NO SPECIFIC RELATION TO OPERATING ACTIVITIES SIC-25 INCOME TAXES: CHANGES IN THE TAX STATUS OF AN ENTITY OR ITS SHAREHOLDERS SIC-29 SERVICE CONCESSION ARRANGEMENTS: DISCLOSURE SIC-32 INTANGIBLE ASSETS: WEBSITE COSTS 95 97 104 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 118 119 120 121 123 124 126 127 128 129 130 Effective Date Periods beginning on or after July 2009 Page of IFRS First-time Adoption of IFRSs SCOPE    IFRS does not apply to entities already reporting under IFRSs GENERAL REQUIREMENTS  IFRS applies to the first set of financial statements that contain an explicit and unreserved statement of compliance with IFRSs IFRS applies to any interim financial statements for a period covered by those first financial statements that are prepared under IFRSs ‒ IFRSs that are currently effective; or ‒ One or more IFRSs that are not yet effective, if those new IFRS permit early adoption    Select IFRS accounting policies using either: Recognise/derecognise assets and liabilities where necessary so as to comply with IFRSs Reclassify items that the entity recognised under previous accounting framework as one type of asset, liability or component of equity, but are a different type of asset, liability or component of equity under IFRS Apply IFRSs in measuring all recognised assets and liabilities Effective Date Periods beginning on or after July 2009 Page of IFRS First-time Adoption of IFRSs RECOGNITION AND MEASUREMENT OPTIONAL EXEMPTIONS MANDATORY EXCEPTIONS IFRS does not permit these to be applied by analogy to other items An entity may elect to use one or more of the following exemptions, which provide specific relief, on adoption of IFRSs:  Business combinations  Share-based payment transactions  Insurance contracts  Fair value or revaluation as deemed cost  Use of revalued amount as deemed cost for ‘event driven fair values’ between transition date and date of the first IFRSs reporting period  Deemed cost for assets used in operations subject to rate regulation  Leases  Cumulative translation differences  Investments in subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates  Assets and liabilities of subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures  Compound financial instruments  Designation of previously recognised financial instruments  Fair value measurement of financial assets/liabilities at initial recognition  Decommissioning liabilities included in the cost of property, plant and equipment  Financial assets or intangible assets accounted for in accordance with IFRIC 12 Service Concession Arrangements  Borrowing costs  Extinguishing financial liabilities with equity instruments accounted for in accordance with IFRIC 19 -Extinguishing Financial Liabilities with Equity Instruments  Joint arrangements  Severe hyperinflation  Government loans  Stripping costs in the production phase of a surface mine in accordance with IFRIC 20 Stripping Costs in the Production Phase of a Surface Mine IFRS prohibits retrospective application in relation to the following:  Estimates  Derecognition of financial assets and financial liabilities  Hedge accounting  Non-controlling interests OPENING IFRS STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION    An opening IFRS Statement of Financial Position is prepared at the date of transition All IFRSs are applied consistently across all reporting periods in the entity’s first set of IFRS compliant financial statements (i.e both the comparatives and the current reporting period) If a standard is not yet mandatory but permits early application, an entity is permitted, but not required, to apply that Standard in its first IFRS set of financial statements ACCOUNTING POLICIES PRESENTATION AND DISCLOSURE Use the same accounting policies in the opening IFRS statement of financial position and throughout all periods presented in the first IFRS financial statements  Those accounting policies have to comply with each IFRS effective at the end of the first IFRS reporting period Changes in accounting policies during first year of IFRS If, between the date of an entity’s interim financial report (prepared in accordance with IAS 34 Interim Financial Reporting) and the issue of its first annual IFRS financial statements, and entity changes accounting policies and/or adopts exemptions:  The requirements of IAS Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors not apply  The reconciliation between IFRSs and previous GAAP has to be updated An entity’s first set of financial statements are required to present at least three statements of financial position and two statements each of statements of comprehensive income, income statements (if presented), statements of cash flows and statements of changes in equity, related notes and in relation to the adoption of IFRSs, the following:  A reconciliation of equity reported under previous accounting framework to equity under IFRSs: ‒ At the date of transition to IFRSs ‒ At the end of the latest period presented in the entity’s most recent annual financial statements under previous accounting framework  A reconciliation of total comprehensive income reported under previous accounting framework to total comprehensive income under IFRSs for the entity’s most recent annual financial statements under previous accounting framework  Interim financial reports: ‒ In addition to the reconciliations above, the entity is also required to provide: ‒ A reconciliation of equity reported under its previous accounting framework to equity under IFRSs at the end of the comparable interim period, and ‒ A reconciliation of total comprehensive income reported under its previous accounting framework to total comprehensive income under IFRSs for the comparative interim period, and ‒ Explanations of the transition from its previous accounting framework to IFRS  Any errors made under the previous accounting framework must be separately distinguished  Additional disclosure requirements are set out in IFRS  REPEAT APPLICATION OF IFRS An entity that has applied IFRSs in a previous reporting period, but whose most recent previous annual financial statements not contain an explicit and unreserved statement of compliance with IFRSs, must either apply IFRS or else apply IFRSs retrospectively in accordance with IAS Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors Effective Date Periods beginning on or after January 2005 Page of IFRS Share-based Payment SCOPE IFRS applies to all share-based payment transactions, which are defined as follows:    Equity-settled, in which the entity receives goods or services as consideration for equity instruments of the entity (including shares or share options); Cash-settled, in which the entity receives goods or services by incurring a liability to the supplier that is based on the price (or value) of the entity's shares or other equity instruments of the entity Transactions in which the entity receives goods or services and either the entity or the supplier of those goods or services have a choice of settling the transaction in cash (or other assets) or equity instruments IFRS also applies:   To transfers by shareholders to parties (including employees) that have transferred goods or services to the entity This would include transfers of equity instruments of the entity or fellow subsidiaries by the entity's parent entity to parties that have provided goods and services When an entity does not receive any specifically identifiable goods/services IFRS does not apply to:    Transactions in which the entity acquires goods as part of the net assets acquired in a business combination to which IFRS Business Combinations applies or to the contribution of a business on the formation of a joint venture to which IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements applies Share-based payment transactions in which the entity receives or acquires goods or services under a contract within the scope of IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Presentation and IFRS Financial Instruments Transactions with an employee in his/her capacity as a holder of equity instruments IDENTIFYING THE SHARE-BASED PAYMENT CONDITIONS RECOGNITION VESTING CONDITIONS A condition that determines whether the entity receives the services that entitle the counterparty to receive the share-based payment and is either: a service condition, or a performance condition SERVICE CONDITION PERFORMANCE CONDITION Requires the counterparty to complete a specified period of service during which services are provided to the entity If the counterparty, regardless of the reason, ceases to provide service during the vesting period, it has failed to satisfy the condition A performance target is not required to be met Requires:  The counterparty to complete a specified period of service (i.e service condition) - the service requirement can be explicit or implicit, and  Specified performance target(s) to be met while the counterparty is rendering that service The period of achieving the performance target(s):  Shall not extend beyond the end of the service period, and  May start before the service period on the condition that the commencement date of the performance target is not substantially before the commencement of the service period A performance target is defined by reference to:  The entity's own operations (or activities) or the operations or activities of another entity in the same group (ie a non-market condition), or  The price (or value) of the entity's equity instruments or the equity instruments of another entity in the same group (including shares and share options) (ie a market condition) A performance target might relate either to the performance of the entity as a whole or to some part of the entity (or part of the group), such as a division or an individual employee NON-VESTING CONDITIONS A condition that determines whether the entity receives the services that entitle the counterparty to receive the share-based payment and is either: a service condition, or a performance condition  Excluded from grant date fair value calculation Adjustment to the number of shares and/or vesting date amount for actual results NON-MARKET CONDITION MARKET CONDITION Relates to operations of the entity or to the operations of another entity in the same group I Performance condition, upon which the exercise price, the vesting or exercisability of an equity instrument depends, that is related to the market price of the entity's equity instruments (including share options) or those of another entity within the group        Included in the grant date fair value calculation No adjustment to the number of shares or vesting date amount for actual results Recognise the goods or services received or acquired in a sharebased payment transaction when the goods are obtained or as the services are received Recognise an increase in equity for an equitysettled share-based payment transaction Recognise a liability for a cash-settled sharebased payment transaction When the goods or services received or acquired not qualify for recognition as assets, recognise an expense Effective Date Periods beginning on or after January 2005 Page of IFRS Share-based Payment MEASUREMENT EQUITY-SETTLED Transactions with employees    Measure at the fair value of the equity instruments granted at grant date The fair value is never remeasured The grant date fair value is recognised over the vesting period Transactions with nonemployees   Measure at the fair value of the goods or services received at the date the entity obtains the goods or receives the service If the fair value of the goods or services received cannot be estimated reliably, measure by reference to the fair value of the equity instruments granted CHOICE OF SETTLEMENT Share-based payment transactions where there is a choice of settlement   If the counterparty has the right to choose whether a share-based payment transaction is settled in cash or by issuing equity instruments, the entity has granted a compound instrument (a cash-settled component and an equitysettled component) If the entity has the choice of whether to settle in cash or by issuing equity instruments, the entity shall determine whether it has a present obligation to settle in cash and account for the transaction as cash-settled or if no such obligation exists, account for the transaction as equity-settled CASH-SETTLED Cash-settled share-based payment transactions    Measure the liability at the fair value at grant date Re-measure the fair value of the liability at each reporting date and at the date of settlement, with any changes in fair value recognised in profit or loss for the period Liability is recognised over the vesting period (if applicable) GROUP SETTLED SHARE-BASED PAYMENTS An entity that receives goods or services (receiving entity) in an equity-settled or a cash-settled share-based payment transaction is required to account for the transaction in its separate or individual financial statements   The entity receiving the goods or services recognises them, regardless of which entity settles the transaction, this must be on an equity-settled or a cash-settled basis assessed from the entities own perspective (this might not be the same as the amount recognised by the consolidated group) The term 'group' has the same definition as per IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements that it includes only a parent and its subsidiaries Effective Date Periods beginning on or after July 2009 Page of IFRS Business Combinations SCOPE / IDENTIFYING A BUSINESS COMBINATION A business combination is: Transaction or event in which acquirer obtains control over a business (e.g acquisition of shares or net assets, legal mergers, reverse acquisitions) IFRS does not apply to:  The accounting for the formation of a joint arrangement in the financial statements of the joint arrangement itself  Acquisition of an asset or group of assets that is not a business  A combination of entities or businesses under common control Definition of “control of an investee” An investor controls an investee when the investor is exposed, or has rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the investee and has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the investee Power: when existing rights give an investor the current ability to direct the relevant activities of an investee (ie the activities that significantly affect the investee’s returns) Rights to variable returns: an investor is exposed or has rights to returns that vary as a result of the investee’s performance Link between power and returns: control exists when an investor has power over an investee and exposure or rights to the investee’s variable returns, and has the ability to use its power to affect the investee’s returns Principal or agent: an investor with power over an investee determines whether it is a principal or an agent An investor that is an agent does not control an investee when it exercises delegated rights Definition of a “Business” An Integrated set of activities and assets that is capable of being conducted and managed for the purpose of providing goods or services to customers, generating investment income (such as dividends or interest) or generating other income from ordinary activities Effective Date Periods beginning on or after July 2009 Page of IFRS Business Combinations THE ACQUISITION METHOD A business combination must be accounted for by applying the acquisition method STEP 1: IDENTIFYING THE ACQUIRER STEP 2: DETERMINING THE ACQUISITION DATE IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements is used to identify the acquirer – the entity that obtains control of the acquiree The date which the acquirer obtains control of the acquiree STEP 3: RECOGNISING AND MEASURING THE IDENTIFIABLE ASSETS ACQUIRED, THE LIABILITIES ASSUMED AND ANY NON-CONTROLLING INTEREST (NCI) IN THE ACQUIREE  STEP 4: RECOGNISING AND MEASURING GOODWILL OR A GAIN FROM BARGAIN PURCHASE       Goodwill is recognised as the excess between: ‒ The aggregate of the consideration transferred, any non-controlling interest in the acquiree and, in a business combination achieved in stages, the acquisition-date fair value of the acquirer’s previously held equity interest in the acquiree ‒ The identifiable net assets acquired (including any deferred tax balances) Goodwill can be grossed up to include the amounts attributable to NCI, which is the case when NCI is measured at their acquisition date fair value A gain from a bargain purchase is immediately recognised in profit or loss The consideration transferred in a business combination (including any contingent consideration) is measured at fair value Contingent consideration is either classified as a liability or an equity instrument on the basis of IAS 32 Financial Instruments Contingent consideration that is within the scope of IFRS (classified as a financial liability) needs to be remeasured at fair value at each reporting date with changes reported in profit or loss MEASUREMENT PERIOD Applies when initial accounting is incomplete at the end of the reporting period in which the business combination occurs Measurement period ends when acquirer receives information seeking about facts and circumstances at acquisition date, not to exceed one year from acquisition date     As of the acquisition date, the acquirer recognises, separately from goodwill: ‒ The identifiable assets acquired ‒ The liabilities assumed ‒ Any NCI in the acquiree The acquired assets and liabilities are required to be measured at their acquisition-date fair values There are certain exceptions to the recognition and/or measurement principles which cover contingent liabilities, income taxes, employee benefits, indemnification assets, reacquired rights, share-based payments and assets held for sale NCI that represent ownership interests and entitle their holders to a proportionate share of the entity’s net assets in the event of liquidation (e.g shares) are measured at acquisition-date fair value or at the NCI’s proportionate share in net assets All other components of NCI (e.g from IFRS Sharebased payments or calls) are required to be measured at their acquisition-date fair values DETERMINING WHAT IS PART OF THE BUSINESS COMBINATION TRANSACTION The acquirer should consider if the consideration includes amounts attributable to other transactions within the contract (pre-existing relationship, arrangements that remunerate employees etc.) Acquisition and other costs  Cannot be capitalised, must instead be expensed in the period they are incurred  Costs to issue debt or equity are recognised in accordance with IAS 32 and IFRS ADDITIONAL GUIDANCE FOR APPLYING THE ACQUISITION METHOD TO PARTICULAR TYPES OF BUSINESS COMBINATIONS BUSINESS COMBINATION ACHIEVED IN STAGES    An acquirer sometimes obtains control of an acquiree in which it held an equity interest immediately before the acquisition date This is known as a business combination achieved in stages or as a step acquisition Obtaining control triggers re-measurement of previous investments (equity interests) The acquirer remeasures its previously held equity interest in the acquiree at its acquisition-date fair value Any resulting gain/loss is recognised in profit or loss BUSINESS COMBINATION ACHIEVED WITHOUT TRANSFER OF CONSIDERATION   The acquisition method of accounting for a business combination also applies if no consideration is transferred Such circumstances include: ‒ The acquiree repurchases a sufficient number of its own shares for an existing investor (the acquirer) to obtain control ‒ Minority veto rights lapse that previously kept the acquirer from controlling an acquiree in which the acquirer held the majority voting rights ‒ The acquirer and the acquiree agree to combine their businesses by contract alone SUBSEQUENT MEASUREMENT AND ACCOUNTING   In general, after the date of a business combination an acquirer measures and accounts for assets acquired and liabilities assumed or incurred in accordance with other applicable IFRSs However, IFRS includes accounting requirements for reacquired rights, contingent liabilities, contingent consideration and indemnification assets Effective Date Periods beginning on or after January 2005 IFRS Insurance Contracts SCOPE This Standard applies to:   Insurance contracts that an entity issues and reinsurance contracts that it holds Financial instruments that an entity issues with a discretionary participation feature If insurance contracts include a deposit component, unbundling may be required The following are examples of contracts that are insurance contracts, if the transfer of insurance risk is significant:              Insurance against theft or damage to property Insurance against product liability, professional liability, civil liability or legal expenses Life insurance and prepaid funeral expenses Life-contingent annuities and pensions Disability and medical cover Surety bonds, fidelity bonds, performance bonds and bid bonds Credit insurance that provides for specified payments to be made to reimburse the holder for a loss it incurs because a specified debtor fails to make payment when due Product warranties (other than those issued directly by a manufacturer, dealer or retailer) Title insurance Travel assistance Catastrophe bonds that provide for reduced payments of principal, interest or both if a specified event adversely affects the issuer of the bond Insurance swaps and other contracts that require a payment based on changes in climatic, geological or other physical variables that are specific to a party to the contract Reinsurance contracts The following are examples of items that are not insurance contracts:           Investment contracts that have the legal form of an insurance contract but not expose the insurer to significant risk Contracts that pass all significant insurance risk back to the policyholder Self-insurance i.e retaining a risk that could have been covered by insurance Gambling contracts Derivatives that expose one party to financial risk but not insurance risk A credit-related guarantee Product warranties issued directly by a manufacturer, dealer or retailer Financial guarantee contracts accounted for under IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement Does not address the accounting for financial assets held by insurers, but temporary exemption from the requirement to apply IFRS is available until January 2023 (R); and Overlay approach permitted for designated financial assets LIABILITY ADEQUACY TEST An insurer is required to assess at the end of each reporting period whether its recognised insurance liabilities are adequate, using current estimates of future cash flows under its insurance contracts If that assessment shows that the carrying amount of its insurance liabilities is not sufficient, the liability is increased and a corresponding expense is recognised in profit or loss AREAS OF ADDITIONAL GUIDANCE DISCLOSURE Additional guidance is provided in IFRS in relation to: An insurer is required to disclose information that identifies and explains the amounts arising from insurance contracts:     Changes in accounting policies Prudence Insurance contracts acquired in a business combination or portfolio transfer Discretionary participation features It is highly recommended that insurers gain a full understanding of IFRS as requirements and disclosures are onerous      10 Its accounting policies for insurance contracts and related assets, liabilities, income and expense Recognised assets, liabilities, income and expense The process used to determine the assumptions that have the greatest effect on measurement The effect of any changes in assumptions Reconciliations of changes in liabilities and assets An insurer is required to disclose information that enables user of its financial statement to evaluate the nature and extent of risks arising from insurance contracts:     Its objectives, policies and processes for managing risks Information about insurance risk Information about credit risk, liquidity risk and market risk Information about exposures to market risk arising from embedded derivatives

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